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Blast hits Hezbollah area in Beirut, showing spread of Syria conflict

A large suspected car bomb exploded Thursday in the southern part of this city in a neighborhood controlled by the militant group Hezbollah, signaling another encroachment of the Syrian civil war into Lebanon.

The blast killed more than 20 people and wounded scores of others in streets crammed with offices and military posts for the Shiite Muslim group. Several 10-story apartment buildings burned for more than an hour.

Thursday’s explosion was notable because it struck the busy residential Rweiss neighborhood. That’s well within what Hezbollah considers its “security zone,” an area where it maintains an overt and aggressive buffer around the homes and offices of its leadership.

A much smaller car bomb wounded dozens of people last month in an attack that, like Thursday’s, was widely seen as a spillover from the Syrian civil war and Hezbollah support for the regime of Syrian leader Bashar Assad.

A group that calls itself Brigades of Aisha, Mother of the Faithful – a name with powerful sectarian overtones reflecting a militant Sunni Muslim stance – took credit for Thursday’s explosion in a video released to local television news.

“We’ve sent a message to (Hezbollah chief) Hassan Nasrallah’s pigs,” one masked gunmen said in a portion of the statement played on the air.

Three masked men could be seen posing with guns behind a white banner inscribed with the Muslim profession of faith. The group threatened further attacks.

Celebratory gunfire was reported at nightfall in some Sunni neighborhoods across the country, highlighting the deep sectarian divide in a country where many Sunnis support the Syrian rebellion and Shiites typically back the Assad government.

Last month, American intelligence officials warned the Lebanese government that Sunni militants, ideologically aligned with al Qaida, planned to target Hezbollah for backing the Syrian regime. Factions in the fighting in Syria have broken on increasingly sectarian lines, and those divisions have been bleeding across the border into Lebanon for much of the last year.

Fearful of becoming a target for radical Sunni groups – who consider Hezbollah and other Shiites to be heretics – Hezbollah recently added armed patrols and random traffic stops around the neighborhood where the explosion hit Thursday.

The blast came at evening rush hour from what Lebanese security officials and Hezbollah security men at the scene suspected was a car bomb. It tore through a dense block of apartments, including one building rumored to hold a Hezbollah facility.

“We were working the dinner hours when there was a huge explosion that blew out our back windows,” said a young man who works at a fast food restaurant. He refused to give his name because of the number of plainclothes Hezbollah security men visible in the area. “I ran out into the street and saw many dead bodies and everything was on fire.”

A large cloud of oily black smoke was visible from miles away.

An hour after the explosion, fire crews appeared to be struggling to contain a series of blazes within apartment buildings next to the blast site. Many people flocked to the scene to claim bodies. Some worried that more dead or wounded might be trapped in the rubble.

Men who appeared to be Hezbollah security agents could be seen arresting a young man for questioning.

“He’s Syrian. That’s enough,” said one of those arresting the man. “Any Syrian found in the security zone is subject to arrest tonight.”

The rumor that the apartment block contained a Hezbollah facility – such outposts are often low-key but ubiquitous in the area – gained credence by the reaction to the blast by Hezbollah security. Its men immediately cordoned off the area and occasionally fired guns into the air to warn curious onlookers to back away.

A local television station affiliated with Hezbollah reported that security officials thought the bomb weighed at least 200 pounds, had been in a car and was detonated by a suicide bomber. Those claims remained unverified.

Security in the area had been high, suggesting that a suicide attack might be a plausible explanation for how a bomb could penetrate the neighborhood.

“Hezbollah is on the streets every night these days with guns doing patrols,” said another resident, who refused to be identified while speaking to an American news company. “They’ve never really carried guns in public like this before. And recently we started seeing them armed during the day.”

Pointing at a row of trash bins along the street, he said the patrols were hunting for bombs.

“They check those trash cans three, four times a day,” he said. “They use dogs and sometimes devices to look for bombs around here.”

Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati announced that Friday would be a day of mourning for Lebanon as political figures across the country’s often-fractious political divide condemned the blast and warned of a plot to spread sectarian tensions.

“We won’t allow anyone to drag (Beirut’s southern neighborhoods) into their traps, and those paving the ground for such terrorist operations must stop this behavior,” said Ali Ammar, a member of parliament who represents Hezbollah.